If you want to share access to Internet mail between several
users, you may need to set access rights for particular accounts or
account groups.

Users are classified in two categories:

Administrators - these users can see all accounts defined in the
running copy of The Bat! and can change all account properties,
program preferences and settings.

Ordinary Users - these users cannot see all defined accounts,
only the accounts in their group. The properties they may change
are determined by the Administrators.

If at least one ordinary user is defined, an initial Log on
dialog is invoked at the program's start-up and a user has to enter
his/her account name and password (if any) to have access to
his/her account. The password for a particular account can be set
using the "Account | Set Access Password" command from the main
program window.

To allow an ordinary user to have several accounts and to see
them simultaneously, the Administrator must define an account group for that user.

Within a network, it is possible to give access to a particular
account from a machine connected to the network. All the
Administrator needs to do is to set the account's home directory to
a directory accessible on the network and to create a copy of the
account on the machine from which the account is going to be
accessed. Even if machine does not have the TCP/IP protocol
installed on it, it is still possible to use The Bat! - just define
the working directory of The Bat! to be the same as that of a
machine which is running The Bat! in the role of "Server".